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  1. 3rd Bass soon found themselves involved in controversy. First, Pete Nice used the name of Hammer’s 1988 single “Turn This Mutha Out” to diss to him in their song “Cactus”, simply to say ...

  2. MC Serch - 3rd Bass Medley (Live Session) | Vevo ctrlFar Rock in the house! For our Hip-Hop At 50 celebrations this year, we’ve invited rhymers of all eras a...

    • 6 Min.
    • 20,2K
    • McSerchVEVO
  3. 3rd Bass. HIP-HOP/RAP · 1989. 3rd Bass's initial novelty was their pale skin color, but he Cactus Album showed that the only crutch Serch and Prime Minister Pete Nice relied on was the one propping up Nice's bum leg. Def Jam's choice to add 3rd Bass to its roster resulted in a late '80s burner, much of it due to pre-sample clearance wanderlust.

  4. 18. Juli 2010 · FROM THE ALBUM "DERELICTS OF DIALECT" (1991).

  5. 14. Apr. 2020 · Perhaps 3rd Bass was attempting to establish a strident “real hip-hop” movement where the commercial success of songs like “(You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!)” was not allowed, i.e. “strictly underground funk, keep the crossover” as EPMD would later opine. If so the irony here is that the overnight success of “The Gas Face” made 3rd Bass just as commercially viable as ...

  6. 19. Jan. 2008 · MC Serch, Pete Nice & DJ Richie Rich were the three founding members of the group known as 3rd Bass. Formed in Queens NYC around 1987, 3rd Bass were notable ...

    • 2 Min.
    • 103,3K
    • ProjectPlacebo
  7. Artist profile. 3rd Bass. Members: MC Serch, Pete Nice, DJ Richie Rich. Years active: 1987 - 1992. Facebook. For the casual listener of Hip Hop in the late 80’s and early 90’s, 3rd Bass was synonymous with Pop Goes the Weasel; the Vanilla Ice bashing song and video. For the serious 3rd Bass fan though, 3rd was much deeper than one song.